Sponsored links

Child and youth sexual abuse by clergy

Child & youth sexual
abuse
in the
Roman Catholic Church, 2005 - 2007

Sponsored link.

Information about the victims and perpetrators:

The John Jay College of Criminal Justice conducted a study of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic
clergy. It was commissioned by U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. The College released their
report in late 2004-FEB. 1
Among their findings were the following data:

11,000 allegations of sexual abuse of children had been made between
1950 and 2002; 61% were substantiated; 9% were unsubstantiated; 30% were not
investigated because the alleged perpetrator had died.

4,450 clergy (4%) out of the total 110,000 who served during the
interval are alleged to have sexually abused children (persons under the age of 18).

78% of the alleged victims were post-pubertal (11 to 17 years of age).
1,2

Unfortunately, the full scope of the abuse will never be known. According to
the OC Weekly, many dioceses destroyed or withheld personnel files. This
allegedly included the dioceses of:

Cleveland, OH

Dallas, TX

Fairbanks, Alaska,

Manchester, NH

Oakland, CA

Springfield, MA

Tucson, AZ

Worcester, MA. 3

Large settlements:

As of mid-2005, there are 195 Roman Catholic
dioceses in the U.S. They had paid a total of over $1.5 billion dollars in
settlements since 1950. 4 According to CNN.com:

"The Rev. Thomas Doyle, who left a promising career with the church
to help represent victims, had warned the bishops in 1985 that abuse costs
could eventually exceed $1 billion. He said: "Nobody believed us. I
remember one archbishop telling me, 'My feeling about this, Tom, is no one's
ever going to sue the Catholic Church'." 5

David Castaldi,
chairperson of the Catholic lay reform group Voice of the Faithful has predicted that the total cost of the sexual abuse scandal could
eventually total three billion dollars. At the group's national meeting in
2005-JUL, he noted that the Diocese of Portland, OR, faces claims in excess
of a half billion; the Archdiocese of Los Angeles alone may pay out as much as
$1.5 billion. 6

The four largest settlements to date are described below, in
chronological order:

Boston, MA: The scandal surfaced in
Boston during 2002-JAN when court documents revealed that church leaders
moved Rev. John Geoghan from parish to parish in spite of evidence that
he had molested children.This incident triggered an awareness of
sexual abuse by clergy across the country. in 2002-DEC, Cardinal Bernard
Law resigned as archbishop of the diocese. A report issued in 2003-JUL
indicated that more than 1,000 children had probably been molested by
over 235 priests from 1940 to 2000. In 2003-SEP-09, the Boston
Archdiocese agreed to compensate 552 victims who said they were abused
by priests a total of $85 million. Victims received awards ranging from
$80 thousand to $300 thousand, less a large percentage to pay legal
fees. The diocese is the fourth largest in the U.S. It has 2.1 million
parishioners. According to the Associated Press:

"Award amounts will be decided by a mediator, based on the
type of molestation, the duration of the abuse, and the injury
suffered. Parents who filed lawsuits claiming their children were
abused will receive $20,000. The church also will provide for
psychological counseling for victims for as long as they want it,
and will put some victims on advisory boards monitoring the abuse
problem.....The archdiocese also released a statement saying in part
that it is 'committed to doing everything humanly possible to make
sure that this never occurs again. Our prayer is that this may, with
the help of God, become a reality'."

Gary Bergeron, who sued for molestation by the late Rev. Joseph
Birmingham said:

"This piece of paper means one thing to me and many
men I represent here today. From this day forward I am not an alleged
victim of clergy abuse. I am recognized, I'm a survivor." 7,8

Stephen Pope, a theology professor at Boston College, estimated that it
will take a generation for the Church to recover from the scandal. He
said: "The whole country has been waiting for Boston to resolve this
question, waiting for Boston to set an example." 7

Orange County, CA: During 2004, the
diocese agreed in principle to a $100 million settlement to compensate
approximately 90 victims with amounts ranging from $500 thousand to $4
million. However, attorney fees may chew up to 40% of the payments. The
diocese has 1,044,191 parishioners. The settlement was officially
announced on 2005-JAN-03. 9
According to the LA Times, Bishop Tod D. Brown

"...agreed
to open his personnel files to the public. A judge will screen them to
remove names of alleged abuse victims, and material protected by legal
privileges, such as communications between lawyers and psychologists and
their clients.....The diocese had a $171-million investment portfolio
and $23.4 million in cash reserves at the end of the 2003 fiscal year,
according to its financial statement." 10

Bishop Brown wrote in a statement:

"We are ashamed that the crime of
sexual abuse took place in our church and are determined that it will
not happen again. Even after these cases are settled, all our efforts to
make our church a safer environment for all and to educate everyone
about the horror of childhood sexual abuse in our society will continue.
We owe it to those who have suffered this kind of abuse to name it for
what it is and, as far as possible, make amends." 11

Covington, KY: In 2005, the diocese
established a $120 million fund to compensate an unknown number of
victims. The diocese has only 89,000 parishioners. So far, the diocese
has revealed that 205 allegations have been received against 35 of its
priests -- nearly 10% of the total number of 354 priests who have worked
in the diocese over the past 50 years. Sixteen of the priests have died;
five have been defrocked; 14 have been permanently removed from ministry
but remain priests. The maximum cost per parishioner could be as much as
$1,300. Claimants will be divided into four groups, depending on the
nature and severity of the abuse. Compensation for members would range
from $5,000 to $450,000.

The exact number of abuse victims who will come forward in the future is
unknown. The diocese is planning to collect $80 million from its
insurance companies. The remaining $40 million will come from a
combination of "investments and real estate." Any unused amount
in the fund will revert to the diocese. Stanley Chesley, lead
attorney for the plaintiffs, wrote in a statement: "This is a very
important and in many ways unprecedented result in an extremely
difficult matter." Bishop Roger Foys wrote in a statement.

"After
personally meeting with more than 70 victims, I am painfully aware that
no amount of money can compensate for the harm these victims suffered as
innocent children. Nevertheless, I pray that this settlement will bring
some measure of peace and healing to victims and their loved ones." 2

Los Angeles, CA: The diocese of Los Angeles
-- the largest in the U.S., announced on 2006-DEC-02 that it had agreed to pay $60 million to settle 45
lawsuits that alleged sexual abuse involving 22 priests.
Cardinal Roger Mahony issued a news release, saying:

"I pray that the settlement of the initial group of cases will help the
victims involved to move forward with their lives and to build a brighter future
for themselves and their families."

This left more than 500 lawsuits involving allegations against 200 priests
still unresolved. 4 Negotiation
s had made little progress for years. A recent decision by a Los Angeles
County Superior Court judge to allow consideration of punitive damages may
have speeded the process.

Jury selection for the first of these remaining lawsuits was expected to
begin on 2007-JUL-16. However news of a last-minute near-settlement was
leaked on JUL-14. Details are expected to be announced on JUL-16. It
allegedly
involves the payment of between $600 million and $650 million to about 500
plaintiffs -- an average of 1.2 to 1.3 million each. Insurance companies, the
archdiocese and several religious orders will share in the payments.

"No matter what happens, no resolution, guilty verdict or settlement
magically takes away the pain of having been raped or molested by
Catholic priests in this archdiocese." 12

Other settlements:

Portland, OR: In 2007-JUN, the Diocese
of Portland agreed to pay about $52 million to 175 victims and reserved
another $20 million for future claims.

Chicago, IL: The Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago agreed
to pay more than $12.6 million to 16 persons who accused priests of sexual
abuse. Cardinal Francis George apologized for the abuse and said in a
statement:

"My hope is that these settlements will help the survivors and their
families begin to heal and move forward. ... We must continue to do
everything in our power to ensure the safety of the children in our
care."

In an unprecedented attempt at openness, the archdiocese is
making George's deposition public.

This brings the total payments to $65 million to settle about
250 claims over the past three decades. Mediation continues in about two dozen
other cases. 13

San Diego, CA: During 2007, the Diocese of San Diego settled with a group of 144 plaintiffs for almost $200 million. One of the clauses in the agreement was that an independent judge would review the priests' sealed personnel records and determine which ones would be made public. A retired San Diego Superior Court judge ruled on 2010-OCT-22 that nearly 10,000 pages could be released to the public. The records are from the personnel files of 48 priests who were either credibly accused, convicted of sexual abuse. or were named in a civil lawsuit. According to the Associated Press, the documents show:
"... that the Diocese of San Diego long knew about abusive priests, some of whom were shuffled from parish to parish despite credible complaints against them. ...

"The files show what the diocese knew about abusive priests, starting decades before any allegations became public, and that some church leaders moved priests around or overseas despite credible complaints against them."

" 'We encourage all Catholics, all members of the community, to look for these documents,' attorney Anthony DeMarco said at a news conference. 'These documents demonstrate years and years and decades of concerted action that has allowed this community's children to be victimized, and it is not until the community looks at these documents that this cycle is ever going to be ended'." 14

The website Bishop Accountability.org at http://www.bishop-accountability.org/ collects and publishes internal Roman Catholic Church papers that have been released as the result of litigation on clergy abuse nationwide.